98 research outputs found

    Lighting for cycling in the UK : a review

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    While UK governments have recently sought to increase cycling activity, it remains a minority interest. One reason for this is the perceived danger of cycling on roads filled with traffic. There is statistical evidence to support this perception; for equal exposure, cyclists are more likely to be seriously injured than either drivers or pedestrians. Lighting has a role to play in reducing the hazards of cycling by enhancing the visibility and conspicuity of cyclists. Unfortunately, it is not at all clear that the current lighting regulations and recommendations for cycling and cyclists are the best that can be achieved or are even adequate for these purposes. A number of actions are suggested that should enable lighting’s contribution to the safety of cyclists to be realized

    The association between correlated colour temperature and scotopic/photopic ratio

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    The S/P ratio is a design parameter that may be considered in road lighting. This article compares the S/P ratios and CCTs of the 297 light source spectra identified in IES TM-30-15 to test the assumption that higher S/P ratios demand higher CCTs. The results suggest that, for a given lamp type, there is a strong association between S/P ratio and CCT, and hence that for a given CCT only a small variation in S/P ratio is available. However, the results also suggest that a larger variation in S/P ratio is possible if the lighting designer is able to consider a change in lamp type

    A Review of Risk Matrices Used in Acute Hospitals in England.

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    In healthcare, patient safety has received substantial attention and, in turn, a number of approaches to managing safety have been adopted from other high-risk industries. One of these has been risk assessment, predominantly through the use of risk matrices. However, while other industries have criticized the design and use of these risk matrices, the applicability of such criticism has not been investigated formally in healthcare. This study examines risk matrices as used in acute hospitals in England and the guidance provided for their use. It investigates the applicability of criticisms of risk matrices from outside healthcare through a document analysis of the risk assessment policies, procedures, and strategies used in English hospitals. The findings reveal that there is a large variety of risk matrices used, where the design of some might increase the chance of risk misprioritization. Additionally, findings show that hospitals may provide insufficient guidance on how to use risk matrices as well as what to do in response to the existing criticisms of risk matrices. Consequently, this is likely to lead to variation in the quality of risk assessment and in the subsequent deployment of resources to manage the assessed risk. Finally, the article outlines ways in which hospitals could use risk matrices more effectively

    Discourse, justification and critique: towards a legitimate digital copyright regime?

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    Digitization and the internet have posed an acute economic challenge to rights holders in the cultural industries. Faced with a threat to their form of capital accumulation from copyright infringement, rights holders have used discourse strategically in order to try and legitimate and strengthen their position in the digital copyright debate with governments and media users. In so doing, they have appealed to general justificatory principles – about what is good, right, and just – that provide some scope for opposition and critique, as other groups contest their interpretation of these principles and the evidence used to support them. In this article, we address the relative lack of academic attention paid to the role of discourse in copyright debates by analysing user-directed marketing campaigns and submissions to UK government policy consultations. We show how legitimacy claims are justified and critiqued, and conclude that amid these debates rests some hope of achieving a more legitimate policy resolution to the copyright wars – or at least the possibility of beginning a more constructive dialogue

    Treatment of isoniazid-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although resistance to isoniazid (INH) is the most common form of drug resistance seen among <it>Mycobacterium tuberculosis </it>isolates, there have been few studies on the efficacy and optimal duration of treatment for patients with INH-resistant tuberculosis (TB).</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We evaluated retrospectively the treatment outcomes of 39 patients who were treated for INH-resistant pulmonary TB. The treatment regimens consisted of a 12-month regimen of rifampin (RIF) and ethambutol (EMB), with pyrazinamide (PZA) given during the first 2 months (2HREZ/10RE) (<it>n </it>= 21), a 9-month regimen of RIF and EMB with PZA during the first 2 months (2HREZ/7RE) (<it>n </it>= 5), and a 6-month regimen of RIF, EMB, and PZA (2HREZ/4REZ) (<it>n </it>= 13). After drug susceptibility testing confirmed the INH-resistance of the isolated <it>M. tuberculosis </it>strains, INH was discontinued for all the patients.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Among the 39 patients, treatment was successfully completed by 36 patients (92%). However, treatment failure occurred, and acquired resistance to other first-line drugs, such as RIF, developed in three patients (8%). Cavitary and bilateral extensive lesions were commonly found in the chest radiographs of the patients who exhibited treatment failure.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These findings underline the seriousness of concerns regarding treatment failure and the development of multidrug-resistant TB in patients with INH-resistant TB following treatment with recommended regimens.</p

    Obstacle detection: A pilot study investigating the effects of lamp type, illuminance and age

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    A novel apparatus was used to examine the effect of light source, illuminance and observer’s age on the ability to detect obstacles in peripheral vision, simulating a raised paving slab under mesopic visual conditions. The data collected were used to determine the height of obstacles above the paving surface required for 50% detection. From these detection heights it was determined that: (1) obstacle detection was influenced by illuminance, the 50% detection height being lower at 20 lux than at 0.2 lux, (2) the young observers (60 years old) age groups, and (3) obstacle detection was affected by lamp type at 0.2 lux, with the 50% detection height decreasing as lamp S/P ratio increased, but at 2.0 and 20 lux there was no significant difference between the three test lamps
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